Sexist Comment by Austin Police Officer: Isolated Incident or Part of Broader Culture?

Update (2:19 p.m.): Officer Andrew Pietrowski officially retired from the Austin Police Department on Friday, Dec. 12 after learning KUT would air his comments this week.

Original Story (9:07 a.m.): Police Chief Art Acevedo suspended two officers in November for making jokes about rape victims. The Austin Police Association said at the time that the respective three-day and five-day suspensions were "fair and appropriate." The incident took place after a local attorney had released a video in which the two Austin police officers are laughing and one of the officers comments: "Go ahead and call the cops. They can't un-rape you."

Recently, offensive comments were made to KUT's reporter Joy Diaz, while she was covering a police-related story. A quick warning: This story contains offensive remarks made about women.

Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo is convinced APD's culture is changing for the better. And says comments like "[cops]can't un-rape you" are examples of behavior that he calls "[the] extreme minority."

Statistically, when you consider the couple of thousand police officers in Austin, he’s right. However, there are still regrettable police shootings and some minorities still feel targeted by police. But Austin is no longer the ticking bomb some say it was before Acevedo took over the department in 2007. Questions still linger, however, about whether or not APD is clearly letting its officers know that inappropriate comments will not be tolerated.

Take for instance the recent comments of Officer Andrew Pietrowski.

Just to set the scene, this reporter was at the police union's building waiting to interview the head of the union. That’s when veteran officer Pietrowski approached me and started talking about the media fall-out over the video tape of NFL running back Ray Rice punching and knocking out his then-fiancé in a hotel elevator. Rice was suspended by the NFL and was released by his team.

Pietrowski says the event was blown out of proportion by the media. That's when he explained.

"Now, stop and think about this. I don't care who you are. You think about the women's movement today, [women say] 'Oh, we want to go [into] combat,' and then, 'We want equal pay, and we want this.' You want to go fight in combat and sit in a foxhole? You go right ahead, but a man can't hit you in public here? Bulls--t! You act like a whore, you get treated like one!"

I recently played Pietrowski's tape to APD Chief Acevedo.

"Somebody [who] has that mentality, has no business being a cop," he says.

Normally, that kind of behavior demands that a person place a formal complaint. The Office of the Police Monitor then investigates the complaint and so does APD's internal affairs.

Activist Antonio Buehler with Peaceful Streets placed a formal complaint before the police monitor for the way he was treated by cops in 2012. Buehler says since his complaint was televised, many people have approached him with their own stories of inappropriate police behavior. Speaking at a public forum in front of the police monitor, Buehler says none of those people that have talked to him have made formal complaints "because [they believe] nothing will happen."

Civil rights attorney Jim Harrington disagrees. He says, under chief Acevedo, things do happen. He has been willing to discipline and even let go of police officers who have failed to follow the department's code, something that Harrington says rarely happened before. Harrington thinks that's progress.

"Unfortunately, the standard was pretty low in Austin with police chiefs [prior to Acevedo]," he says, adding that now that Acevedo has won the community's trust on that front, it's time he moves on and gets rid of the often hard to prove "old boys culture." Harrington has worked in close proximity with the police, he's developed relationships with people in the force and with people who support the department in one way or another.

"You know? This issue of how women are treated by the police has been bothering me for a long time," Harrington says. "I know women who do training [for the police], and they talk about the attitude of the officers sitting there in the classroom sort of snickering, rolling their eyes or making comments under their breath. So, I know this is an ongoing issue."

Perhaps, for some, it's not an alarming issue.

Chief Acevedo, however, says sexism in the police is alarming to him. He says that mentality does not help the department gain the community's trust, which is something he is committed to doing, he says, through "engagement, accountability, respect and absolutely [through an] on-going dialogue."

A dialogue that he says he will also have with his officers.

Correction: KUT changed the spelling of, now retired, APD Officer Andrew Pietrowski (adding the "i" between the "p" and the "e" because documentation KUT requested from the City of Austin has his name spelled both with and without the "i." However, the name associated with his former badge number does have the "i." We regret any confusion the misspelling of Andrew Pietrowski's name may have caused.

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A former Austin Police detective has pled not guilty to manslaughter charges in the 2013 death of Larry Jackson, Jr. Charles Kleinert entered a plea of not guilty in a Travis County courtroom this morning and was released on bond after being indicted by a grand jury earlier this year.

His trial is set to begin on Apr. 20.

Jackson’s mother, Billie Mercer, was at the hearing, and said she didn’t want the trial of her son’s death to become a lightning rod for racial divides in Austin.

“I don’t like all the violence,” Mercer said in response to the recent flare-ups after high-profile cases in which officers weren’t indicted after involvement in the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, MO and Eric Garner in New York. “I’m glad this isn’t a bunch of. . . fighting and tearing up the neighborhood. No, I’m not for that. I just want justice in the court system.”

Update 2:40pm: The APD has officially released the name of this morning's shooter: Larry Steve McQuilliams (DOB: 12-13-1964)

Update 2:00pm: Chief Acevedo says the residence of this morning's shooter has been cleared and is safe to enter. The APD and FBI had been slowly examining the apartment in the Barton Hills neighborhood to make sure there were no explosives or traps left to harm law officers.

Update 10:00 am: Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo says there were no explosives found on the body of the suspect in this morning's shooting in downtown Austin, nor were there any explosives found in the suspect's vehicle.

At 2:22 a.m., APD started to receive reports of gunfire in multiple locations downtown, including the Mexican Consulate, the federal courthouse, and APD headquarters. Acevedo says the shooting occurred within the span of ten minutes. APD initially believed the suspect also fired shots at the BB&T bank, but later said the suspect did not target the bank. Officers believe more than 100 rounds were fired overall.

According to Acevedo, the officer involved in the shooting was putting away horses from an overnight mounted patrol when he saw the suspect shooting in front of APD headquarters. A source confirms the officer involved is Sgt. Adam Johnson, a 15 year APD veteran.

"As he held two horses with one hand, he discharged at least one round with a single handed shot," Acevedo says. "That'd be one heck of a shot." Police are still investigating whether the suspect was killed by the officer's bullet or a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Johnson is now on paid administrative leave, which is standard procedure after an officer fires a weapon at another person.